Nintendo and Universal‘s The Super Mario Bros. Movie has officially crossed the $1 billion USD mark, becoming the first film of 2023 to do so.
The Super Mario Bros. Movie has officially joined the one billion-dollar club, in less than a month since its release. As of this past weekend, the animated film collected $1.02 billion at the global box office, becoming the first movie of 2023 to pass the milestone.Released on April 7 — April 5 in select regions —
Illumination's latest has collected $532.5 million from markets outside the US,
thanks to general word-of-mouth and the PG rating, appealing to both young and
old moviegoers. The film earned $490 million within the US and Canada, refusing
to slow down throughout the month of April.
The Nintendo-produced film marks Illumination's third
animated movie to set the record, after Despicable Me 3 ($1.034 billion) and
Minions ($1.159 billion). It has also become the highest-grossing video game
movie, besting 2016's Warcraft.
It is also worth mentioning that The Super Mario Bros. Movie
was released in Japan just last week, April 28, so it's still going to rake in
money while competing against another Chris Pratt-led movie, Guardians of the
Galaxy Vol. 3, releasing May 3 in the country.
As for its success, besides nostalgia, the Mario movie also
benefitted from the fact that in the weeks leading up to its premiere, no other
studios released a kids' movie since December 2022. Puss in Boots: The Last
Wish was the last major big-budget animated film we saw, which made a worldwide
total of $482.7 million.
Directed by Aaron Horvath and Michael Jelenic, The Super
Mario Bros. Movie features Pratt's voice as the titular Italian plumber, with
Charlie Day as brother Luigi, serving as an origin story for immigrant Brooklyn
plumbers who get whisked away into the magical Mushroom Kingdom.
Mario then teams up with Princess Peach (Anya Taylor-Joy),
Toad (Keegan-Michael Key), and Donkey Kong (Seth Rogen) in a war against the
loud-mouthed Bowser (Jack Black), who also has Luigi held captive. It's an
all-around fun ride filled with easter eggs for dedicated fans, ranging from
the shapeshifting Tanooki outfit to a high-stakes race across the sparkling
Rainbow Road.
The film currently holds a 59 percent average critics rating
on Rotten Tomatoes, with most pointing out the flawed narrative. As mentioned
before, audiences seem to be having a great time with it, earning the film a 96
percent score on the aggregator website.
In a recent interview, Shigeru Miyamoto, creator of the
original Mario and Zelda games, hinted that the company plans more adaptations
based on Nintendo characters.
“There are various ways to develop characters (for the
screen), including characters that are suitable for film and characters that
are well known,” he said (translated from Japanese by VGC).
The Super Mario Bros. Movie is now showing in theatres
worldwide.